Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10           Page 13

TEMPTING

The couple crosses the street

between the two white lines

pretending to keep them safe

while I sit in the car waiting,

waiting for them to reach

my hood where beneath

the horn coils for a strike

prompted by my hand

caressing the inside

of the steering wheel.

 

I feel like a little kid

sneaking up behind someone

and jabbing them in the ribs

as I scream and laugh

when they shudder beneath

my hands, and screams

shriek over my amusement.

 

I so want to honk the horn

and cry laugh at the couple

crossing hand in hand

only feet away from my car.

MY LIPS NEVER MOVE

The dark dummy stands

on my left shoulder,

the light dummy stands

on my right shoulder,

between the two I am

the ventriloquist for both.

 

“You’re not doing a good enough job.”

“Yes, I am. I’m doing this job

better than anyone else can.”

“Nobody cares what you’re doing or feeling.”

“People do care about me

and what’s going on.”

“You don’t make a difference

in anyone’s life.”

“Yes, I do. People appreciate

that I care about them

and let them know it.”

 

I am the consummate ventriloquist;

my lips never move.

SEAWARD

Rusty cannon pointed

seaward looks like

a barnacle-laden bottle

tossed in the ocean

to deliver its message

over decades of seasick

swells ebbing and flowing –

a castaway’s castaway

yearning for shore,

for discovery,

for rescue

instead of a statue

staring out to sea

like a widow waiting.

WINDOWS DEAD

Two windows – dead now

with plywood nailed

across their openness

like heavy coins placed

atop dead people’s eyes

to keep them shut

and to pay the ferry man

to transport them

to the other side.

 

No longer windows to the soul

behind bricks showing individual

initiative to warp straight lines

and to crack wrinkled mortar

as the building decays

into inside darkness

searching escape through chinks.

IN A PICKLE

When we were kids,

my older sister bugged

me enough I removed

a whole sweet pickle

from the jar and placed

it between the sheets

of my sister’s bed

far enough down

so when she stretched

out her feet, they would

touch this cold, dead thing,

and she’d jerk her feet up

or better yet jump

out of bed; a scream or yelp

would have tickled my ears.

 

I laugh about it even now

fifty years later and wonder

if I can get away with it

again.

10-C.TvM-puzzle-Labyrinth-2022-01

RUST SQUEALS

Like an old couple holding hands

the gate and latch defend

the yard year after year

until rust squeals hinges.

 

The gate wobbles and topples

as its grip loosens on the latch,

and weeds wind tendrils

like prisoners’ fingers

through wire fencing

and ignores the outstretched palm

of the empty latch.

 

Season after season the gate

buries under dust to dust

rust to rust; a skeleton

of wire flakes decay

like dates on a calendar

marked off with an X.

Home Planet News